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Fiancées en folie

Original title: Seven Chances
  • 1925
  • Tous publics
  • 56m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
13K
YOUR RATING
Buster Keaton in Fiancées en folie (1925)
Watch Trailer [OV]
Play trailer0:57
2 Videos
77 Photos
Quirky ComedyRomantic ComedySlapstickComedyRomance

A man learns that he will inherit a fortune if he marries by 7PM that evening.A man learns that he will inherit a fortune if he marries by 7PM that evening.A man learns that he will inherit a fortune if he marries by 7PM that evening.

  • Director
    • Buster Keaton
  • Writers
    • Roi Cooper Megrue
    • Clyde Bruckman
    • Jean C. Havez
  • Stars
    • Buster Keaton
    • Ruth Dwyer
    • T. Roy Barnes
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    13K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Buster Keaton
    • Writers
      • Roi Cooper Megrue
      • Clyde Bruckman
      • Jean C. Havez
    • Stars
      • Buster Keaton
      • Ruth Dwyer
      • T. Roy Barnes
    • 78User reviews
    • 59Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos2

    Trailer [OV]
    Trailer 0:57
    Trailer [OV]
    Seven Chances
    Trailer 0:57
    Seven Chances
    Seven Chances
    Trailer 0:57
    Seven Chances

    Photos77

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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Buster Keaton
    Buster Keaton
    • James Shannon
    Ruth Dwyer
    • His Girl
    T. Roy Barnes
    T. Roy Barnes
    • His Partner
    Snitz Edwards
    Snitz Edwards
    • His Lawyer
    Frances Raymond
    Frances Raymond
    • Her Mother
    • (as Frankie Raymond)
    Erwin Connelly
    • The Clergyman
    Jules Cowles
    Jules Cowles
    • The Hired Hand
    Eugenia Gilbert
    Eugenia Gilbert
    • First Chance: Girl Who Laughs at Jimmie at the Club
    Doris Deane
    • Second Chance: Girl Who Laughs at Jimmie at the Golf Course
    Judy King
    Judy King
    • Third Chance: Girl Who Shreds 'Will You Marry Me' Note
    Hazel Deane
    • Fourth Chance: Girl Who Refuses on a False Assumption
    Bartine Burkett
    • Fifth Chance: Girl Proposed to Going Up the Staircase
    Connie Evans
    • Sixth Chance: Girl Proposed to Going Down the Staircase
    Pauline Toller
    • Seventh Chance: Girl Proposed to in the Phone Booth
    Jean Arthur
    Jean Arthur
    • Miss Smith - Office Receptionist
    • (uncredited)
    Lori Bara
    • Mother of Underage Girl
    • (uncredited)
    Rosalind Byrne
    Rosalind Byrne
    • Hat Check Girl
    • (uncredited)
    Louise Carver
    Louise Carver
    • Prospective Bride Who Operates Crane
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Buster Keaton
    • Writers
      • Roi Cooper Megrue
      • Clyde Bruckman
      • Jean C. Havez
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews78

    7.812.6K
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    Featured reviews

    8gavin6942

    Running Never Was So Funny

    Jimmie Shannon (Buster Keaton) is a broker in need of money. When a lawyer comes to tell him he has inherited a certain sum, Jimmie avoids him thinking he may be bringing a summons. And then when he does hear the good news, there's a catch...

    Directed by and starring Buster Keaton, this film portrays his particular brand of physical comedy, though perhaps not with as much danger as "The General" or as many tricks as "Sherlock Jr." The music of Robert Israel really carries this film. Not just because it's a silent film, but because it's great music -- moving, light and comedic. And there is an implied racial tone... Jimmie passes on proposing to both a Jew and a black woman.

    I literally "laughed out loud" at this film! It is a shame Keaton considered it his worst film. Who knew it was so hard to get someone to marry you for $7,000,000 (in 1925 money, no less)?
    8slokes

    Love For Sale

    True love takes a lot of work - but this is ridiculous!

    Jimmie Shannon (Buster Keaton) is a partner in a brokerage who can't quite bring himself to propose to Mary (Ruth Dwyer), the only woman he loves. Then, his business facing ruin, he discovers he stands to inherit a fortune if only he gets married that day. He proposes to Mary, but she's put off by his apparent insincerity. So Jimmie is left to find a woman, any woman, who will marry him. Will love prevail?

    The film is an odd one for Keaton, starting off with a brief color sequence (in 1925) and moving quite slowly for Buster through the first third. The story was one Keaton had handed to him, rather than one he worked on himself, and feels at times like a "ladies' picture," focusing as it does on Jimmie's frustrated feelings and Mary's unhappiness.

    For a while, Buster's not even the main laugh-getter in the film. For a while, he plays a kind of straight man to troll-visaged Snitz Edwards, playing the lawyer bringing the news of Jimmie's inheritance. Snitz chases after Jimmie and his partner, who think he's a process-server and dodge him, but Snitz prevails. Buster still pines for Mary, saying he can love no other woman (which she happens to hear over a telephone connection, changing her mind), but agrees to bring to bring a woman to church before the deadline out of loyalty to his partner.

    "In case two show up, I'll marry the other," Snitz declares.

    There are other oddities about "Seven Chances," like racial humor (Jimmie almost proposes to a black woman; a blackface actor plays a thick-headed hired hand) and the "Saphead"-style character Buster plays. It would seem like a lesser Keaton for that, but instead emerges as a masterwork of pacing and narrative. Just as you begin to settle in to "Seven Chances" tea-cozy aesthetic, it ramps things up for one of the great double-rally endings in movie history.

    There's also a charming sequence where Jimmie tries to find a bride among a list of female members of his country club, the "seven chances" of the film's title. He burns through those chances in six minutes, and then gets rejected by a receptionist (Jean Arthur) and a hat-check girl (Rosalind Byrne) for good measure. The sequence plays with set design and framing to keep you always wondering as to what will happen next.

    One amazing thing about the film you might not notice is the clever use of panning. Camera pans were still fairly new in cinema; framing was often stationary. But Buster is always in motion, and the camera moves with him. One clever shot, of Buster finding a turtle attached to his tie, apparently employs a treadmill in order to achieve an overhead camera angle.

    The gags here keep coming, and give "Seven Chances" the feel of a classic Keaton short. Except there's a real story here to be told, and the humor always works to move the ideas forward. It's a classic demonstration of Keaton's ingenuity - even if he didn't have a hand in the film's conception or writing he directed it, and it shows - as well as his ability to find as many ways of making you laugh in as little time as possible.
    9Boba_Fett1138

    Sweet little Keaton movie.

    This is a really sweet little Buster Keaton movie, with a greatly executed story.

    Its story is fun enough to make the movie consistently a fun one. It's the sort of story that has copied a lot in movies ever since but also was used in movies before this one. It's even a popular subject for modern present day comedies. It perhaps makes "Seven Chances" seem less original than it in fact truly is of course.

    The movie uses a lot of title cards. I mean, basically every line that gets spoken in the movie gets shown in a title card. It also makes the dialog part of the comedy of the movie. It isn't a much visual comedy, meaning that it doesn't really feature much slapstick or things like that. It's more a movie that relies on its comical situations and of course on the acting comical talent of Buster Keaton. Also the supporting cast is really more than great.

    The movie begins a bit standard and perhaps even a bit slow but when the movie its story starts to take form the movie turns into one great laugh fest, with the last 20 minutes or so as the ultimate highlight, when things start to get really crazy and paced and the movie gets turned into one big non-stop comical chase! It's the one great fun moment after the other, with also some great and dangerous stunt work again from Buster Keaton himself!

    A great Buster Keaton must-see, from the silent-era!

    9/10

    http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
    8ecjones1951

    Terrific introduction for those new to Keaton

    Contrary to what you may have read, "Seven Chances" (1925) was made before Buster Keaton signed with MGM and relinquished artistic control over his own films. His gifts of extraordinary agility, timing, and visualizing the comic potential in the most mundane situations are everywhere in evidence.

    The plot of "Seven Chances" is ancient. A young bachelor stands to inherit millions if he can find a bride by a certain day and marry at a certain hour. The date is invariably the same as the day the will is read, and in the hands of Keaton, his writers and cast, the comic possibilities are brilliantly exploited. The same premise was the basis for at least three other films before Keaton's, and was remade (abysmally -- from what I've read) as "The Bachelor" with Chris O'Donnell in 1999. The chain of events that flows from news of the inheritance just builds and builds over the course of the film, the gags growing increasingly clever as time grows shorter. "Seven Chances" clocks in at less than an hour, but the final 15 minutes (which Buster Keaton reportedly reworked several times) are among the most hilarious in all of silent film, perhaps in the history of screen comedy.

    Initially, only Buster, his business partner (T. Ray Brown) and the lawyer (Snitz Edwards, who was so terribly homely he was cute) are aware of the dilemma. After Buster botches a proposal to his longtime girlfriend, (Ruth Dwyer), he pops the question to several more female acquaintances, with predictably embarrassing results. It is then that Brown and Edwards (unbeknownst to Buster) decide to place a newspaper announcement advertising his plight.

    Once the newspapers hit the streets, the chase is on. Keaton is pursued through 1920s Los Angeles by dozens, then scores, then seemingly hundreds of would-be brides. They come in all ages, shapes and sizes, makeshift veils trailing after them. No obstacle is too great in their pursuit to beat out each other for the prize of marriage to a man they don't even know, and Buster throws out plenty of roadblocks in his wake.

    In 1979, Walter Kerr wrote the definitive book on silent comedies, "The Silent Clowns." One of the jacket blurbs reads, "I found myself laughing out loud at routines from movies I have never seen." I don't have Kerr's gift, but I can tell you that "Seven Chances" is the most consistently funny movie Buster Keaton ever made. All of his movies include inventive sight gags, but "Seven Chances," more than most of Buster's movies, relies on character comedy as well as situational comedy for its humor. And it scores a bull's eye on both. A sheer delight.
    Snow Leopard

    Hilarious & Inventive

    Buster Keaton's comic genius makes "Seven Chances" a wildly entertaining film. The first half of it is quite good, if imperfect, but the second half is a tour-de-force of sustained humor and creativity. Keaton plays Jimmie Shannon, a young man who learns that he stands to inherit a fortune, but only if he marries by 7 PM that very day. It's the kind of goofy premise that in lesser hands could be a complete flop, but Keaton gets all kinds of possibilities out of it.

    For most of the first half of the film, Jimmie is busy racing around proposing to every woman he can find. His true love, Mary, tries to find Jimmie herself, but he is already off on his frantic search for someone to accompany him to the altar. The search is always funny, at times extremely so. This first half has a handful of things that don't quite work, such as the black-faced servant (who was, though, probably intended as a sympathetic character), but if it were not for that and a couple other small details, this would be a nearly perfect film.

    In the second half, all of the complications set up a frantic chase sequence, with literally hundreds (at least) of angry women pursuing Jimmie through the city, while he tries to get to Mary. This might be the best comic chase sequence ever filmed. It is hilarious and incredibly inventive, with careful choreography, a great variety of backgrounds, and a huge collection of gags both obvious and subtle. No description could do it justice - it has to be seen at least once to appreciate it.

    If you are a fan of Keaton or of silent films in general, make sure to see this one.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Buster Keaton had this project foisted upon him by producer Joseph M. Schenck, who had bought the rights to the hit Broadway show. Keaton later called it his least favorite feature and tried to keep film historian Raymond Rohauer from restoring the only known copy of the movie.
    • Goofs
      Just as the horde of would-be brides overruns the college football game, one of the players can be seen throwing himself to the ground, already pretending to be trampled.
    • Quotes

      Title Card: By the time Jimmie had reached the church, he had proposed to everything in skirts, including a Scotchman.

    • Connections
      Featured in 4 Clowns (1970)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 23, 1925 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • None
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Seven Chances
    • Filming locations
      • Chatsworth, Los Angeles, California, USA(train scene)
    • Production company
      • Buster Keaton Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $268
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 56m
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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